Correct way to install Mercurial on Ubuntu

69,223

Solution 1

NEW ANSWER

Previously I was pointing to TortoiseHG PPA, which also contained Mercurial. For now (year 2015) the more recent version of Mercurial is in another PPA, specific for Mercurial only.

Important note: this version is incompatible with TortoiseHG, and Tortoise will be REMOVED, if you install the more recent Mercurial!

If you don't care of Tortoise and just want more recent Mercurial package, use next command to install:

sudo add-apt-repository -y ppa:mercurial-ppa/releases
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install -y mercurial

However, this won't give you the absolutely latest version either. To enjoy the latest version, you may want to install it via PIP:

sudo apt-get install -y python-pip python-dev
sudo pip install mercurial --upgrade

This would give you the very latest version (3.6.2 vs 3.3.2 from the PPA). Seems this one is also not compatible with TortoiseHG from the repos.


OLD ANSWER

Though available from default repos, the version there is outdated. At the time of writing: 2.2.2 vs 2.5.2. So I would recommend to use the PPA:

sudo add-apt-repository -y ppa:tortoisehg-ppa/releases
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install mercurial tortoisehg

TortoiseHG is not required, but is recommended.

Solution 2

Yeah you can install it by just

sudo apt-get install mercurial

but for me it gave very old version (2.0.2). You can check this by hg version. To get the newer version you can do

sudo apt-get install python-setuptools python-dev build-essential
sudo easy_install -U mercurial

Now I have 3.0.1 version

aniket@ubuntu:~$ hg version
Mercurial Distributed SCM (version 3.0.1)
(see http://mercurial.selenic.com for more information)

Copyright (C) 2005-2014 Matt Mackall and others
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO
warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

More details : Installing Mercurial on Linux

PS: Above link goes to my personal blog which has additional details.

Solution 3

Mercurial is available from the Universe repositories. Enable that repository in USC if it's not already enabled. Then just type the following into a terminal.

sudo apt-get install mercurial

The configuration file is saved in /etc/mercurial/hgrc You can configure mercurial by editing that file. To open that file in gedit type the following command

sudo gksudo gedit /etc/mercurial/hgrc

Solution 4

If you are using an older version of Ubuntu (12.04 perhaps?), use the Mercurial PPA.

sudo add-apt-repository ppa:mercurial-ppa/releases
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install mercurial

As of this writing, this installs mercurial 3.0.1 on Ubuntu 12.04 for example.

Solution 5

just to let everyone know,
sudo apt-get install mercurial
is delivering version 3.0.1 (latest as the time of writing this post)
so no need to try other stuff as this is everything you'll need.

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Genadinik
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Genadinik

Thank you to everyone who has helped me. I am extremely appreciative of the amazing people on StackOverflow who have helped me :) I currently run https://www.problemio.com under which I offer mobile apps, books, coaching, and online courses, and even a B2B course licensing business: https://www.problemio.com/udemy/white-labeling-or-buying-udemy-courses.html I also run a funny t-shirt store: https://www.waveifyoulike.com

Updated on March 23, 2021

Comments

  • Genadinik
    Genadinik over 3 years

    I am kind of new to both, Mercurial and Ubuntu.

    I seem to have awkwardly installed a few other software packages already, so I wanted to see how others would go about doing this.

    Should I use the apt-get command? If so, how would I use it in this case? Where is the best place to install Mercurial on my file system, and how do I make it part of my shell (I am thinking svn-ish) so I can properly check things in and update?

    Thanks, Alex

  • Keith Smiley
    Keith Smiley over 10 years
    For Ubuntu 10.04 this gave me a much newer version than the default package.
  • Neil Traft
    Neil Traft about 10 years
    On 12.04 this gave 2.8.2 instead of 2.0.2!! Huge difference!
  • Eric Twilegar
    Eric Twilegar almost 10 years
    in what version of ubuntu?
  • Felipe Alarcon
    Felipe Alarcon almost 10 years
    lubuntu 14.04, I believe in ubuntu should be the same.
  • Skunkwaffle
    Skunkwaffle over 9 years
    I just wanted to say that "apt-get install mercurial" wasn't updating to the latest version (even though it said it was doing so). This solution finally worked. Thank you.
  • user1175849
    user1175849 almost 9 years
    It doesn't seem to be true for regular Ubuntu 14.04.
  • Chris Hayes
    Chris Hayes about 4 years
    On 20.04 and just running sudo apt install mercurial without adding PPAs installed v5.3.1
  • marc.guenther
    marc.guenther almost 4 years
    This is much more useful than the accepted answer! On Xenial, this gave me the most recent version 5.5.1 instead of a hugely outdated version 3.1.3.